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I have had my fill of Gyros. I made another batch of it this week because
previous attempts had turned out so well. This time I had a little more than a pound of ground lamb and I had a pound and a half of ground pork and beef mix. I bought some nice fresh pita bread, made some tzatziki , chopped up some feta, onions and tomatoes. We had gyros on Pita and it was delicious, but all that gyros meat was too much for two of us. A little of that goes a long way. Last night we had the same again, heating thin slice of gyros in a pan. It was good, but there was still almost half the loaf left. Tonight we had another huge serving of it, and the dogs got the leftovers. Tomorrow is shopping day and I plan on not having any form of Greek food. .. |
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On Thu, 03 May 2007 20:09:55 -0400, Dave Smith
wrote: I have had my fill of Gyros. I made another batch of it this week because previous attempts had turned out so well. This time I had a little more than a pound of ground lamb and I had a pound and a half of ground pork and beef mix. I bought some nice fresh pita bread, made some tzatziki , chopped up some feta, onions and tomatoes. We had gyros on Pita and it was delicious, but all that gyros meat was too much for two of us. A little of that goes a long way. Last night we had the same again, heating thin slice of gyros in a pan. It was good, but there was still almost half the loaf left. Tonight we had another huge serving of it, and the dogs got the leftovers. Tomorrow is shopping day and I plan on not having any form of Greek food. . What recipe do you use for the Gyros? I have Steve's recipe saved but haven't had the chance to try it. Lou |
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On Thu, 03 May 2007 20:09:55 -0400, Dave Smith
wrote: I have had my fill of Gyros. I made another batch of it this week because previous attempts had turned out so well. This time I had a little more than a pound of ground lamb and I had a pound and a half of ground pork and beef mix. I bought some nice fresh pita bread, made some tzatziki , chopped up some feta, onions and tomatoes. We had gyros on Pita and it was delicious, but all that gyros meat was too much for two of us. A little of that goes a long way. Last night we had the same again, heating thin slice of gyros in a pan. It was good, but there was still almost half the loaf left. Tonight we had another huge serving of it, and the dogs got the leftovers. Tomorrow is shopping day and I plan on not having any form of Greek food. . The only comment I have about that is.... "Gee I wish I could say I was tired of gyros". I'd prefer that it not to be ground meat (lamb meatloaf to me). I like the slices of lamb roasted on a skewer (whatever it's called). Other than that variation, I love gyros. -- See return address to reply by email |
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Dave Smith wrote:
I have had my fill of Gyros. I made another batch of it this week because previous attempts had turned out so well. This time I had a little more than a pound of ground lamb and I had a pound and a half of ground pork and beef mix. I bought some nice fresh pita bread, made some tzatziki , chopped up some feta, onions and tomatoes. We had gyros on Pita and it was delicious, but all that gyros meat was too much for two of us. A little of that goes a long way. Last night we had the same again, heating thin slice of gyros in a pan. It was good, but there was still almost half the loaf left. Tonight we had another huge serving of it, and the dogs got the leftovers. Tomorrow is shopping day and I plan on not having any form of Greek food. . I love gyros..I need a good supplier of pitas. I've been making them myself..and now that I'm convinced I'm able to do them, I don't want to anymore..too time consuming for me. Also, it would be nice if the commissary would stock lamb. -- "All of those faeries and duels and mad queens and so on, and no one quoted old Billy Shakespeare. Not even once." - Billy the Werewolf, The Dresden Files |
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sf wrote:
On Thu, 03 May 2007 20:09:55 -0400, Dave Smith wrote: I have had my fill of Gyros. I made another batch of it this week because previous attempts had turned out so well. This time I had a little more than a pound of ground lamb and I had a pound and a half of ground pork and beef mix. I bought some nice fresh pita bread, made some tzatziki , chopped up some feta, onions and tomatoes. We had gyros on Pita and it was delicious, but all that gyros meat was too much for two of us. A little of that goes a long way. Last night we had the same again, heating thin slice of gyros in a pan. It was good, but there was still almost half the loaf left. Tonight we had another huge serving of it, and the dogs got the leftovers. Tomorrow is shopping day and I plan on not having any form of Greek food. . The only comment I have about that is.... "Gee I wish I could say I was tired of gyros". I'd prefer that it not to be ground meat (lamb meatloaf to me). I like the slices of lamb roasted on a skewer (whatever it's called). Other than that variation, I love gyros. Souvlaki? -- "All of those faeries and duels and mad queens and so on, and no one quoted old Billy Shakespeare. Not even once." - Billy the Werewolf, The Dresden Files |
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sf wrote:
On Fri, 04 May 2007 07:48:45 +0200, ravenlynne wrote: Souvlaki According to Wiki.... that's hamburger. ah..ok...thanks ! -- "All of those faeries and duels and mad queens and so on, and no one quoted old Billy Shakespeare. Not even once." - Billy the Werewolf, The Dresden Files |
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ravenlynne wrote:
I love gyros..I need a good supplier of pitas. I've been making them myself..and now that I'm convinced I'm able to do them, I don't want to anymore..too time consuming for me. Also, it would be nice if the commissary would stock lamb. Try a halal butcher. There are lots of them around and mine sells breads on Saturday-- and some are better than any pita I ever had! -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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Giusi wrote:
ravenlynne wrote: I love gyros..I need a good supplier of pitas. I've been making them myself..and now that I'm convinced I'm able to do them, I don't want to anymore..too time consuming for me. Also, it would be nice if the commissary would stock lamb. Try a halal butcher. There are lots of them around and mine sells breads on Saturday-- and some are better than any pita I ever had! Will do, thanks :-) -- "All of those faeries and duels and mad queens and so on, and no one quoted old Billy Shakespeare. Not even once." - Billy the Werewolf, The Dresden Files |
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Lou Decruss wrote:
A little of that goes a long way. Last night we had the same again, heating thin slice of gyros in a pan. It was good, but there was still almost half the loaf left. Tonight we had another huge serving of it, and the dogs got the leftovers. Tomorrow is shopping day and I plan on not having any form of Greek food. . What recipe do you use for the Gyros? I have Steve's recipe saved but haven't had the chance to try it. Recipe?? I used about: 1 pound of ground lamb 1 1/2 pound ground beef and pork mixture 1 egg 2 old pitas 5 garlic cloves 1 tsp. salt 1 tsp. pepper 2 tsp. oregano 2 tsp. dried mint (no fresh available) Doing it in the food processor gives a finer, firmer texture. Grease a loaf pan with olive oil and press the meat into it. Bake at 350F for one hour then take out, pour off excess grease and place a foiled wrapped brick (or squared off juice container) on top for 15 minutes. Slice very thinly and served on warmed pita bread with chopped onion, tomatoes, crumbled feta and tzatziki. |
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On Thu, 03 May 2007 23:13:33 -0700, sf wrote:
On Fri, 04 May 2007 07:48:45 +0200, ravenlynne wrote: Souvlaki According to Wiki.... that's hamburger. Wiki must have it backwards... in Australia souvlaki is sliced lamb or chicken roasted on a spit, and gyros is the ground stuff (usually overseasoned and greasy). Souvlaki is miles ahead in the flavour department... |
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On Fri, 04 May 2007 09:32:55 -0400, Dave Smith
wrote: Lou Decruss wrote: A little of that goes a long way. Last night we had the same again, heating thin slice of gyros in a pan. It was good, but there was still almost half the loaf left. Tonight we had another huge serving of it, and the dogs got the leftovers. Tomorrow is shopping day and I plan on not having any form of Greek food. . What recipe do you use for the Gyros? I have Steve's recipe saved but haven't had the chance to try it. Recipe?? I used about: 1 pound of ground lamb 1 1/2 pound ground beef and pork mixture 1 egg 2 old pitas 5 garlic cloves 1 tsp. salt 1 tsp. pepper 2 tsp. oregano 2 tsp. dried mint (no fresh available) Sounds interesting... next time freeze half the meat mixture either before or after it's cooked - why eat it for days on end when you can freeze it for next week/next month? |
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Karen AKA Kajikit wrote:
Sounds interesting... next time freeze half the meat mixture either before or after it's cooked - why eat it for days on end when you can freeze it for next week/next month? I didn't mind having it leftover one Day Two, and I usually like to use up leftovers ASAP, before they get pushed to the back of the fridge and forgotten and turn into science projects. Perhaps I could have frozen the cooked leftovers. I was reluctant to re-freeze previously frozen meat. Maybe the next time I should make it with fresh meat and freeze it. But I have to say that a little of that goes a long way. I can see why Greek and middle eastern joints push those things. They don't put much meat it a Gyros pita sandwich, usually only 2-3 thin strips. |
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On Fri, 04 May 2007 12:23:02 -0400, Karen AKA Kajikit
wrote: On Thu, 03 May 2007 23:13:33 -0700, sf wrote: On Fri, 04 May 2007 07:48:45 +0200, ravenlynne wrote: Souvlaki According to Wiki.... that's hamburger. Wiki must have it backwards... in Australia souvlaki is sliced lamb or chicken roasted on a spit, and gyros is the ground stuff (usually overseasoned and greasy). Souvlaki is miles ahead in the flavour department... I love the sliced stuff.... but I'm not fond of the burger style stuff. -- See return address to reply by email |
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sf wrote in message ... On Fri, 04 May 2007 12:23:02 -0400, Karen AKA Kajikit wrote: On Thu, 03 May 2007 23:13:33 -0700, sf wrote: On Fri, 04 May 2007 07:48:45 +0200, ravenlynne wrote: Souvlaki According to Wiki.... that's hamburger. Wiki must have it backwards... in Australia souvlaki is sliced lamb or chicken roasted on a spit, and gyros is the ground stuff (usually overseasoned and greasy). Souvlaki is miles ahead in the flavour department... I love the sliced stuff.... but I'm not fond of the burger style stuff. We make this all the time: Tzatziki Sauce INGREDIENTS 2 (8 ounce) containers plain yogurt 2 cucumbers - peeled, seeded and diced 2 tablespoons olive oil 1/2 lemon, juiced salt and pepper to taste 1 tablespoon chopped fresh dill 3 cloves garlic, peeled DIRECTIONS In a food processor or blender, combine yogurt, cucumber, olive oil, lemon juice, salt, pepper, dill and garlic. Process until well-combined. Transfer to a separate dish, cover and refrigerate for at least one hour for best flavor. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Souvlaki INGREDIENTS 1 lemon, juiced 1/4 cup olive oil 1/4 cup soy sauce 1 teaspoon dried oregano 3 cloves garlic, crushed 4 pounds pork tenderloin, cut into 1 inch cubes 2 medium yellow onions, cut into 1 inch pieces 2 green bell peppers, cut into 1 inch pieces skewers DIRECTIONS In a large glass bowl, mix together lemon juice, olive oil, soy sauce, oregano, and garlic; add pork, onions, and green peppers, and stir to coat. Cover, and refrigerate for 2 to 3 hours. Preheat grill for medium-high heat. Thread pork, peppers, and onions onto skewers. Lightly oil grate. Cook for 10 to 15 minutes, or to desired doneness, turning skewers frequently for even cooking. |